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Managing Applied Social Research equips you with the skills, strategies, and knowledge you need to effectively manage research projects. Written by a team of nationally-known researchers, this book covers the systematic management of applied social research studies from 'soup to nuts,' providing researchers with an easy-to-follow process and the tools and templates for improving the quality, ethical conduct, and usefulness of the final products. The authors merge expertise adapted from the field of project management with their decades of experience in using established research methodologies and practices to offer readers; practical examples and insights gleaned from major research houses such as Rand, Urban Institute, Mathematica, American Institutes for Research, and others. Key concepts and methodologies are systematically unpacked, with detailed discussion of both theoretical bases and practical applications in the field. Written in plain English, the case studies and vignettes illustrate typical approaches to different scenarios, and the checklists, templates, and other tools provide guides for action.

Starting from basic social research strategies, you'll build an understanding of applied research issues and how projects are best managed in a messy, imperfect world. From conceptualization and proposal through implementation, analysis, and reporting, this book helps you lead your projects to success.
* Learn the skills and concepts necessary to effectively manage applied research projects for the social science disciplines
* Anticipate and prepare for common challenges and obstacles
* Understand the various roles and their requisite tasks and responsibilities
* Learn strategies for making effective decisions about a study's scope, work, schedule, people, budget, and risks during each phase of the research study

Social science research is an essential well of information upon which society is run. Proper management is the key to any research project's success, and success becomes more critical in the field given the potential ramifications in terms of policy and its effects on real, everyday people. Managing Applied Social Research provides sound guidance and expert insight with an essential real-world focus.

List of Tables and Figures

About the Authors

Foreword

Preface

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Section I: Overview

Chapter 1: Why Manage Applied Social Research Studies?

Chapter 2: A Bird's-Eye View of Project Management

Section II: Planning the Study: "Deciding How to Conduct the Research Study"

Chapter 3: Plan the Scope of the Research Study

Chapter 4: Plan the Data Collection and the Data Analysis

Chapter 5: Plan the Study's Work and the Research Schedule

Chapter 6: Plan the People

Chapter 7: Plan the Budget

Chapter 8: Plan How to Deal With the Risks

Section III: Executing the Study: "Delivering the Goods"

Chapter 9: Manage and Direct the Work

Chapter 10: Sustain the Team

Chapter 11: Consider the Worldviews

Chapter 12: Draft the Final Report

Section IV: Closing Out the Study: "Bringing It Home"

Chapter 13: Complete the Activities That End the Study

Chapter 14: Close Out the Study

Postscript: Renewing the Case for Research Management

Book References and Resources

Appendix A: List of Research Design and Management Tasks

Appendix B: Data-Sharing Agreement Example

Index

Darlene Russ-Eft, PhD, is department chair, Organizational and Human Resource Education/Community College Leadership, Oregon State University. Prior to coming to Oregon State University, she was director of research Services at AchieveGlobal, Inc., and previously director of research at Zenger-Miller. She received the 1996 Editor of the Year Award from Times Mirror for her research work, was named Scholar of the Year of the Academy of Human Resource Development, and received the Research Article Award from the American Society for Training and Development (ASTD).

Laura C. Leviton, Ph.D., is Special Adviser for Evaluation at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Since joining RWJF in 1999, she has overseen evaluations in most of RWJF's areas of focus and continues that role today on the Foundation initiatives in preventing childhood obesity. Previously, Leviton was a professor of public health at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and on the faculty of the University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health. For her work in HIV prevention and worksite health promotion, she received the 1993 award for Distinguished Contributions to Psychology in the Public Interest from the American Psychological Association.